K.G.3: Identify the student’s street address, city or town, Massachusetts as the state, and the United States as the country in which he or she lives. Identify the name of the student’s school and the city or town in which it is located.
Children can learn their own home address, and brainstorm reasons why they need to know it (e.g., to call 911, to prevent being lost), and then learn their state, country, and the name and location of their school.
The teacher can propose putting an address (numbers, letters, or other code) on each cubby or on various centers in the classroom, or set up street names for the school walkways; then discuss the order of the address of each location and use of the words, first, next and last; and can refer to the addresses in various ways during the day.
Children can set up a post office, write or dictate letters to each other, then address, send, and deliver the mail.
Connections: Home addresses are also in Safety and Prevention standard 9.2 of Comprehensive Health (chapter 6).
K.G.4: Describe the location and features of places in the immediate neighborhood of the student’s home or school.
Children can take walks around the neighborhood and collaborate to make simple maps, representations, or constructions of the school environment (e.g., yard, neighborhood, community), then role play and give descriptions of locations and features such as the post office, fire station, stores, or bus stops on their map.
They can create a post office in class; check the phone book for their own addresses; make a class address book; create and post “addresses” for different areas of the classroom and/or children’s cubbies; and deliver addressed mail to each other.
Civics and Government K.C.G.5: Retell stories that illustrate honesty, courage, friendship, respect, responsibility, and the wise or judicious exercise of authority, and explain how the characters in the stories show these qualities.
Children can create and use puppets to act out a story about ways to show respect to each other and/or about other characteristics listed in this standard.
Children can read/listen to stories that illustrate courage (e.g., All By Myself by Anne Hines, Anna Banana and Me by Lenore Blegvad, The Buffalo Jump by Peter Roop, Harry and the Terrible Whatzit by Dick Gackenbach) or stories that illustrate character or individual action (e.g., Aani and the Tree Huggers by Jeannine Atkin, Letting Swift River Go by Jane Yolen, The Lorax by Dr. Seuss).
K.C.G.6: Identify and describe family or community members who promote the welfare and safety of children and adults.
Children can talk about people who help keep children safe (e.g., parents, grandparents, older siblings, police officers, firefighters, teachers, doctors).
Children can discuss what it means to be a hero and find examples from literature, their families, and their community.
Connections: The concept of community helpers is also addressed in Safety and Prevention standard 9.2 of Comprehensive Health (Chapter 6).
K.C.G.7: Demonstrate understanding that there are important American symbols by identifying A. the American flag and its colors and shapes B. the melody of the national anthem C. the picture and name of the current president D. the words of the Pledge of Allegiance
Children can listen to and read books about American symbols (e.g., Red, White, Blue, and Uncle Who? The Stories Behind Some of America’s Patriotic Symbols by Teresa Bateman, Uncle Sam and Old Glory: Symbols of America by Delno West).
Children can compare the American flag and flags from around the world, talk about the purpose of flags, where they see American flags, and design a flag for the class with meaningful colors and symbols.
Children can listen to the national anthem and discuss where (or if) they have heard it before and what people do when it is played.
Children can see photos and learn the name of the President, discuss what a president does, and then discuss what responsibilities a “president” of the classroom might have.
Economics K.E.8: Give examples of different jobs that people do, including the work they do at home.
Children can celebrate an “occupation week” when parents or community guests visit to talk or read a story about their work. Children can interview their guests about their job choices (including work at home), and draw pictures of themselves as adults in their chosen job or profession.
Children can create characters with different jobs and interact in dramatic play as those characters (e.g., create a small community with business people, a policeman, a doctor, parents, teacher, children, and others).
Books children can read or listen to include Mama and Papa Have a Store by Amelia Carling, and Bigmama’s by Donald Crews; after reading, they might create an alphabet book of jobs.
K.E.9: Explain why people work (e.g., to earn money in order to buy things they want).
Children can discuss tasks they are responsible for at home, why people want to work, and what they might personally enjoy about particular jobs.
Children can explore what jobs people do for money and what ones they do without being paid.
K.E.10: Give examples of the things that people buy with the money they earn.
Children can organize a classroom bottle drive or bake sale to raise money for an event (e.g., a pizza and book party) or to donate to a charitable project.
Each child can create a list or book with illustrations or photographs of things they, or a friend, would like to buy (e.g., toys, clothing, a haircut, dance or sports lessons) if they earned money in a job.
Kindergarten Learning Experiences in Comprehensive Health
Introduction
Comprehensive health education includes development of children’s physical, mental, emotional, and social health. Brain, body, and cognitive development are critically linked, especially at a young age, and should be addressed in the kindergarten curriculum.
Some overall goals for children’s successful development include
taking turns and sharing
negotiating and cooperating
asking for help when appropriate
making healthy choices
tolerating frustration
developing self-esteem
appreciating other people
feeling connected
developing a sense of humor
using imagination
knowing right from wrong
learning from mistakes
showing feelings appropriately
Physical Growth and Development
Through physical activity and movement, the brain develops the foundations of laterality (left, right), directionality (up, down, in, out), and position in space (over, under, behind). These concepts of pattern and relationship are vital to mathematical thinking as well as to acquisition of reading and writing skills (e.g., seeing how letters are physically formed and fit together in patterns to create words). All children need routine spatial and manipulative activities that stimulate development of sensory integration and appeal to both linguistic and logical development (e.g., music and art activities, dramatic play, creative language play).
To build and strengthen the link between motor development and learning, teachers should encourage physical exploration and experimentation. Kindergarten children need many experiences that integrate body movements with their senses, including kinesthesia (movement), and the vestibular sense (maintaining balance and judging position in space). Experiences that stimulate the inner ear’s vestibular area (e.g., rocking, swinging, rolling, turning upside down, spinning) and the cerebellum support higher cognitive skills.1 Many children learn best through their kinesthetic sense, which can then be used to connect them with academic learning.
The National Association of Sport and Physical Education has produced physical activity guidelines2 stating that kindergarten children should
accumulate at least one hour daily of daily physical activity
engage in unstructured physical activity whenever possible and should not be sedentary for more than one hour at a time
develop competence in movement skills that are the building blocks for more complex movement tasks
have indoor and outdoor areas that meet or exceed recommended safety standards for performing large-muscle activities
Physical development can be maximized by using outdoor and indoor space effectively.3 Outdoor experiences in nature offer opportunities for active physical exercise and play, and provide opportunities for teachers to observe learning and skill development. For indoors play, a large, open space free of obstacles and/or hazards will facilitate movement and physical development.
Play is more than recess (a word that some interpret as just a break from “real” learning), and should be an integral part of the daily schedule.4 The Massachusetts Department of Education’s Student Learning Time Regulations state that at the kindergarten level, outdoor play, active play, and other forms of play are considered structured learning time.5
Teachers and others working with young children should also consider the following guidelines:6
limit adult-child ratios to no more than 9-10 children per adult
use activities that do not eliminate children and modify activities to maximize participation (e.g., sufficient equipment in number and variety for participation by all)
include novel experiences that emphasize the same skill (e.g., different contexts allow for gradual development, extension, and refinement)
employ direct and indirect teaching methods, and respect children’s choices
design movement activities that enhance the overall development of children (motor, cognitive, emotional, and social development)
Gross Motor Skills
Most children acquire laterality prior to kindergarten, but building laterality is still important at kindergarten age. Alternating laterality occurs when children use one side without the use of the other; activities that promote integrated laterality include climbing and descending stairs, or walking and balancing on a low balance beam. One of the last developments in laterality is hand dominance. A child who has not developed fully in this way may use whichever hand is closest to an object or draw on one side of a piece of paper then switch to the other hand to draw on the other side.
Fine Motor Skills
Children must build strength, flexibility, and coordination in the hands and fingers for an appropriate grasp and control of writing/cutting tools. Activities to develop fine motor skills should include movements of the arm and wrist as well as the hand and fingers to build strength. Fine motor activities should be freely available and as unstructured as possible, with adaptations in equipment/use to meet individual needs. If children are not selecting these activities or are not successful, teacher facilitation may be necessary. Children need to practice in order to plan integrated movements. For example, after learning how to climb in one setting, the skill must be adapted and transferred to other climbing situations to be mastered.
Accommodations for Children with Disabilities
Physical activity has a great effect on how children view themselves. All children need opportunities to participate, many of which should minimize competition or elimination. When necessary to include students with special needs or with less developed skills or confidence participate fully in an activity, teachers should modify the environment, equipment, or materials involved (e.g., use bright colors to aid children with visual impairments, provide stability bars to help children hold on, use equipment of smaller size/weight), and/or simplify the activity by breaking it down into smaller steps. Other accommodations might include lowering targets, reducing distances, decreasing the length or intensity of the activity, or increasing rest time.
For children with cognitive disabilities, who are shy, or who have difficulty understanding verbal directions, the teacher can first demonstrate the movements and perform the exercises to model the sequence, starting with one or two movements at a time.
Teachers should fully include children with physical disabilities in movement or dance activities whenever possible, rather than avoiding an activity and thereby implying a lack of faith in a child’s ability to adapt (e.g., a child can “kick” a soccer ball using the footrest on a wheelchair; a child using a walker may be able to learn to “jump” rope).7
Social-Emotional Development and Mental Health
Young children are just beginning to form concepts of other people and perceptions of themselves as learners and doers, with self-perceptions developing primarily between infancy and age eight. Children’s perceptions of their own skills, abilities, and sometimes their “worth,” are based on relationships and experiences with others. Adults who teach and care for them must carefully form appropriate expectations and offer appropriate age-related activities based on a researched knowledge of child development.
Six goals are especially important in guiding young children’s emotional development:8
1. Create a secure emotional environment that enables children to explore and learn.
2. Help children understand emotion, which helps them have insight into their own and others’ feelings, and therefore become empathetic and socially competent.
3. Model genuine, appropriate emotional responses, meaning that teachers themselves should show real emotions. With effective models, children are likely to use appropriate ways of showing their feelings.
4. Support children’s regulation of emotions by gradually guiding them toward self-regulation, a powerful tool leading to healthy development and positive outcomes.
5. Recognize and honor children’s emotional expressiveness and individual expressive styles, which—along with promoting culturally and age-appropriate expression—help children learn in a supportive environment.
6. Help children associate learning with positive emotions, experiencing both the joy and overcoming the frustrations of new learning, which inspires them to tackle hard work, persist at tasks, and seek out challenges.
Positive outcomes grow out of school and classroom climates that foster respect and cooperative problem solving, and that include
routines presented in a variety of ways to help children understand expectations
support for children to solve problems, communicate emotions, and build friendships
recognition that children’s difficult behavior may communicate that they need something or cannot articulate their needs, and/or from inappropriate activities or expectations, and is an opportunity for teachers and assistants to interpret problems and plan interventions
collaboration with families and other caregivers to support consistency for children
learning of specific skills to resolve conflict, increase flexibility, communicate more effectively, increase self-calming and involvement as a member of a community
school policies that support social-emotional learning and mental health, including referrals and other interventions
Learning Standards for Kindergarten
Section 6.2 on the following pages illustrates how the learning standards of the Massachusetts Comprehensive Health Curriculum Framework may be implemented in a kindergarten classroom.
Included Learning Standards
The Framework divides learning standards into the following four strands:
Physical Health
Social and Emotional Health
Safety and Prevention
Personal and Community Health
The learning standards define what students know and should be able to do in certain grade ranges. Kindergarten expectations are included in the standards for pre-kindergarten through grade 5 (PreK–5).
The majority of PreK–5 standards have been included in this chapter; omitted standards are listed below. Learning standards are directly quoted in this chapter; some are followed by separate, kindergarten-level interpretations.
Excluded Learning Standards
The following standards were considered less appropriate or relevant to children in kindergarten and were omitted from this chapter (see Omitted and Combined Standards in chapter 1 for additional explanation):
Physical Health: 1.4, 1.5, 2.4, 2.7, 3.4, 3.5, 3.7, 4.3, 4.4
Mental Health: 5.3, 5.4, 5.5, 5.6, 6.2, 7.2, 7.3, 7.4
Safety and Prevention: 9.3, 9.4, 9.7, 10.3, 10.4, 11.2, 11.4, 12.2., 12.3, 12.4, 12.5, 13.1, 14.3
Organization of Learning Standards in This Chapter
Learning standards are organized in the next section as follows:
Strand (e.g., Physical Health)
|
|
Strand Subcategory (e.g., Growth and Development)
|
Learning standard number: Learning standard text
|
Specific kindergarten interpretation of the standard, if any
| -
Example activity that supports the implementation of the standard at kindergarten, if any*
|
Tips for Teachers or Connections to other learning standards, if any
|
* Any standard not followed by a suggested activity has been included in the activities following the next listed standard (e.g., the activity shown for learning standard 4.2 implements both standards 4.2 and 4.1).
Also note that the level of difficulty for any activity should be freely modified whenever necessary to best promote an individual child’s progress.
|
Kindergarten Learning Experiences in Comprehensive Health
Share with your friends: |